Citations:temulence


 * 1933 — Osbert Burdett, The Brownings, Constable & Co. Ltd. (1933), page 44:
 * But the postcard was not invented in England until 1870, so Miss Barrett had no way of curbing her temulence to a dram of postcard-size.
 * 1972 — Thomas W. Best, Macropedius, Twayne Publishers (1972), page 75:
 * In a ten-line epilogue the hope is expressed that viewers have been moved to better their Latin and their morals and will guard against temulence, theft, and fraud.
 * 1977 — Muhammad Sardar Khan Baluch, History of Baluch Race and Baluchistan, Gosha-e-Adab (1977), page 257:
 * The king of Dalkey, the supine and sullen Nasir-ud-Din, enjoyed the Hellen of his Troy when engaged in luxury, temulence and boudoir.
 * 1993 — James Nielson, Unread Herrings: Thomas Nashe and the Prosaics of the Real, P. Lang (1993), ISBN 0820422541, page 163:
 * But if Harvey's style does amount to a form of cuisinage or gourmandise in which impotably proper things are consumed with no attention paid to what is in them or even their particular flavor, it could perhaps be objected that Nashe for his part indulges in a kind of textual temulence (he certainly always casts his pamphlets as "three sheets to the wind" ).